Book Image

Implementing Microsoft SharePoint 2019

By : Lewin Wanzer, Angel Wood
Book Image

Implementing Microsoft SharePoint 2019

By: Lewin Wanzer, Angel Wood

Overview of this book

Microsoft’s latest addition to their product range, SharePoint Server 2019, is a new enterprise content management platform that brings on-premise collaboration features to life. It can be used as an isolated platform or in a hybrid connected configuration providing management and connectivity to Office 365. You can use the SharePoint framework to host sites, information, data, and applications in a robust CMS that centralizes collaborative content for enterprises. SharePoint 2019 enables new integrations and features that will allow you to work seamlessly with new and old Office products such as Microsoft Power Apps and other Microsoft Office applications. Implementing Microsoft SharePoint 2019 will help you understand the challenges, planning, migration steps, installation concepts, and configuration involved in providing this platform for your enterprise. The book will also show you what the platform brings to the table from an on-premise server perspective. If you’re new to SharePoint 2019, you’ll also be guided through how to get servers up and running so that you and your user community can become productive with this powerful new platform. By the end of this book, you’ll be well-versed in Microsoft SharePoint 2019 and have the knowledge you need to apply your skills in the real world.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Performance overview

All users want is speed and reliability when it comes to satisfying the services provided by SharePoint and your team. I cannot tell you how many times I have been confronted by users and management on why something is performing slowly. Tuning performance ensures that the platform is solid and working as it should, while also giving users the ability to quickly do their work. 

When SharePoint runs slowly or is not reliable, you run the risk of users not being able to complete work – there could be major work being done in SharePoint you may know nothing about. I have been on site at a bank where a process ran every day at the same time. No one knew what was going on. We did some performance checks and figured out it was coming from a specific department. It ended up being a reconciliation process that was custom developed for one of the departments.

This type of scenario is common because, as farm administrators, we do not commonly get in the...